No one knows the difference. Their all to dumb. ^_^ honestly- isn't it amazing that people use text to communicate so much these days, yet trip over every f*cking homophone in the language? Why don't people give a sh!t about expressing themselves clearly? >_<

No one knows the difference. Their all to dumb. ^_^ honestly- isn't it amazing that people use text to communicate so much these days, yet trip over every f*cking homophone in the language? Why don't people give a sh!t about expressing themselves clearly? >_<

I enjoyed the web comic about "The Alot" on Hyperbole and a Half. I always picture one in my head when I read that word now, and its cuteness softens my heart- I don't have to wring the necks of small animals in my fury over word abuse anymore. Or at least not as often.

I enjoyed the web comic about "The Alot" on Hyperbole and a Half. I always picture one in my head when I read that word now, and its cuteness softens my heart- I don't have to wring the necks of small animals in my fury over word abuse anymore. Or at least not as often.

I didn't realize people still said "you're welcome". I say it but seems like if you say "thank you" to someone you get "no problem" or my personal favorite an "uh-huh". Seems rare that someone actually says "you're welcome".

I didn't realize people still said "you're welcome". I say it but seems like if you say "thank you" to someone you get "no problem" or my personal favorite an "uh-huh". Seems rare that someone actually says "you're welcome".

I've had people thank me for some things that it seems odd to reply to with a "You're welcome". I generally end up stammering it out, but it doesn't feel like the right response. Since in some other languages the reply translates to "it's nothing", I don't find "no problem" to be rude. "Mmm-hmm" is a horrible reply to anything. Unless your mouth is full (why DO restaurant servers ask me how things are when I've clearly just shoveled a chunk of steak into my mouth, anyway?)

I've had people thank me for some things that it seems odd to reply to with a "You're welcome". I generally end up stammering it out, but it doesn't feel like the right response. Since in some other languages the reply translates to "it's nothing", I don't find "no problem" to be rude. "Mmm-hmm" is a horrible reply to anything. Unless your mouth is full (why DO restaurant servers ask me how things are when I've clearly just shoveled a chunk of steak into my mouth, anyway?)

Honestly, I'd rather see your welcome than ur welcome. Your welcome is at least an attempt at proper English. Ur is just lazy. The misuse of there, their, and they're and to, two and, too also bother me.

Honestly, I'd rather see your welcome than ur welcome. Your welcome is at least an attempt at proper English. Ur is just lazy. The misuse of there, their, and they're and to, two and, too also bother me.

I can see English being hard if it isn't your first language. A lot of people have been learning proper English since grade school and still can't/won't get it right. I'm not saying my English is anywhere near perfect, but I do know enough to not look like a complete idiot when I'm typing.

I can see English being hard if it isn't your first language. A lot of people have been learning proper English since grade school and still can't/won't get it right. I'm not saying my English is anywhere near perfect, but I do know enough to not look like a complete idiot when I'm typing.

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